Misplaced Pages

User:Bedford/DYK: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
< User:Bedford Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 04:26, 21 January 2009 editBedford (talk | contribs)30,292 edits Kentucky DYKs: New Haven Battlefield Site← Previous edit Revision as of 19:01, 23 January 2009 edit undoBedford (talk | contribs)30,292 edits Indiana DYKsNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
===Indiana DYKs=== ===Indiana DYKs===
{{*mp}}... that to defend ''']''', Governor ] ''(pictured)'' had to recruit ''']''' as those from Indiana would not join the army? <sup>January 23, 2009</sup>
{{*mp}}... that unlike most historical homes, the ''']''' ''(pictured)'' in ], ], reflects the furnishings of a ] family, not the well-to-do? <sup>January 17, 2009</sup> {{*mp}}... that unlike most historical homes, the ''']''' ''(pictured)'' in ], ], reflects the furnishings of a ] family, not the well-to-do? <sup>January 17, 2009</sup>
{{*mp}}... that ''']''' is being considered to become the official state pie of ], USA? <sup>January 13, 2009</sup> {{*mp}}... that ''']''' is being considered to become the official state pie of ], USA? <sup>January 13, 2009</sup>

Revision as of 19:01, 23 January 2009

Indiana DYKs

  • ... that Indiana's state parks were initially designed to preserve their natural state, but gradually began to include recreational activities?
  • ...that despite having only $300,000 to the incumbent's $4 million in campaign funds, Greg Ballard won the 2007 mayoral election in Indianapolis, one of the biggest electoral upsets in Indiana history?
  • ...that in 1996 Andy Campbell, a ranger serving as Tunnel Mill Scout Reservation's caretaker, was shot to death by a wandering drunk who trespassed onto the property, the first such incident in the history of Scouting?

Kentucky DYKs

  • ... that in November 1864, Camp Nelson′s Union soldiers forced 400 ex-slaves outside its shelter, resulting in 102 exposure deaths?

  • ...that the hollow log pipes of the 1787 Mann's Lick salt furnace allegedly still existed in the 1940s?

Elsewhere

  • ...that George Julian Zolnay (pictured), the so-called "sculptor of the Confederacy," was actually Hungarian and did not move to the United States until decades after the Confederacy had ceased to exist?
  • ... that the Cheonhado is a type of circular world map developed in Korea during the 17th century that displays both real and fictional places?
  • ... that by the time Fort Scott was completed, it was already obsolete?